Hercules And DracoConstellations At Battle

The Draco constellation represents a
dragon in Greek myth. One of the “Twelve Labors Of Hercules” was
to steal the golden apples of the Hesperides. During this labor,
Hercules slew the dragon Ladon. Ladon was rewarded for his attempted
heroism with a place amongst the stars.

Thuban was for a time the North star. This was a long time ago, about 3942 BC until 1793 BC. Alpha Draconis will again be the pole star about the year 21,000. Egyptian pyramids were designed to face this star.

Despite being the alpha star, there are seven stars brighter than Thuban in Draco.

The brightest star is Gamma Draconis Etamin. Etamin is an orange giant star with an apparent magnitude of 2.2.

Beta Draconis is a yellow giant with the apparent magnitude of 2.8.

DRACO CONSTELLATION

One of the largest, the Draco constellation is eighth in size.

Despite its size though this dragon can
be slain easily with binoculars and amateur scopes.

There are plenty of double and binary
star systems for you to enjoy.

Eta Draconis is a double star with a
combined apparent magnitude of 2.73. Mu Draconis is a binary system
with 2 white stars at 5.6 and 5.7 apparent magnitude.

Nu Draconis is also a white pair both
at 4.9 apparent magnitude and can be split in binoculars.

Omicron Draconis is a double that can
be split in small telescopes. The primary is a orange giant about 4.6
apparent magnitude.

16 and 17 Draconis form part of a
triple star system. 16 Draconis is a binary star with components of
5.4 and 6.5 magnitude. 17 Draconis has an apparent magnitude of 5.5.
this system can be split in medium sized scopes(6in-8in;150mm-200mm).

The Cat's Eye Nebula(NGC 6543) is the
only deep-sky object of note to the backyard stargazer.

With an apparent magnitude of 9.8, this
nebula is seen in small telescopes as a fuzzy blue-green patch.

Find it at RA 17 hours 53 minutes and
Declination +66 degrees.

NEIGHBORS

With a Constellation the size of Draco,
there are plenty of neighbors. Draco touches 8 other constellations.

FIRE-BREATHING DRAGON

The Draconids are a meteor shower in
October that radiates from the constellation Draco. An average shower
that sometimes can explode into a meteor storm and produce over 1000
meteors an hour. Best viewed from clear, dark skies.